Daily Mail

DOUBLE AGENT TRADED FOR FEMME FATALE

- By Ian Drury Home Affairs Editor

SERGEI Skripal, a former colonel in Russian military intelligen­ce, was considered by the Kremlin to be one of the most damaging spies of his generation.

He was responsibl­e for unmasking dozens of secret agents threatenin­g Western interests by operating undercover in Europe.

Col Skripal, 66, allegedly received £78,000 in exchange for taking huge risks to pass classified informatio­n to MI6.

In 2006, he was sentenced to 13 years in a Russian labour camp after being convicted of passing invaluable Russian secrets to the UK.

A senior source in Moscow said at the time: ‘This man is a big hero for MI6.’

After being convicted of ‘high treason in the form of espionage’ by Moscow’s military court, Col Skripal was stripped of his rank, medals and state awards.

He was alleged by Russia’s security service, the FSB, to have begun working for the British secret services while serving in the army in the 1990s.

He passed informatio­n classified as state secrets and was paid for the work by MI6, the FSB claimed.

Col Skripal pleaded guilty at the trial and co- operated with investigat­ors, reports said at the time. He admitted his activities and gave a full account of his spying, which led to a reduced sentence. In July 2010, he was pardoned by then Russian president Dmitry Medvedev and was one of four spies exchanged for ten Russian agents deported from the US in an historic swap involving red-headed ‘femme fatale’ Anna Chapman.

Mrs Chapman, then 28, was a Manhattan socialite and diplomat’s daughter, who had lived and worked in London during a four-year marriage to British public schoolboy Alex Chapman.

After the swap at Vienna airport, Col Skripal was one of two spies who came to Britain and he has kept a low profile for the past eight years.

He is understood to have been debriefed for months before being given a home and a pension.

Col Skripal was turned by MI6 when he was posted abroad as a military intelligen­ce agent in Europe in the mid-1990s. During his years working for MI6, the balding spy unmasked dozens of agents threatenin­g Western interests.

Col Skripal was so well- connected that even after his retirement from his spy service in 1999 he continued to pass exceptiona­l secrets to London by staying in touch with his former colleagues as a reservist officer.

Col Skripal was nicknamed ‘the spy with the Louis Vuitton bag’ after grainy pictures showed him carrying a bag at an airport en route to a meeting with his handlers.

He may finally have been snared by the FSB after passing his intelligen­ce to MI6’s infamous James Bond- style ‘ spy rock’ – a fake stone packed with receiving equipment in a Moscow park.

Russian secret services exposed the ploy in 2006, revealing how British agents transmitte­d their data to the rock via a hidden hand-held device while walking past it.

After Col Skripal’s conviction, one official said: ‘ His activities caused a significan­t blow to Russia’s external security.’

Chief military prosecutor Sergei Fridinsky said: ‘It is impossible to measure in roubles or anything else the amount of harm caused by Skripal.’

State-run TV in Russia even compared him to the legendary Soviet double agent Oleg Penkovsky, who spied for Britain and the US during the height of the Cold War. Penkovsky was shot by a firing squad in 1963 and is regarded as one of the most effective spies of all time.

 ??  ?? Socialite: Russian agent Anna Chapman had lived in London
Socialite: Russian agent Anna Chapman had lived in London
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 ??  ?? MI6 asset: Skripal’s arrest in 2004 and, top right, in uniform
MI6 asset: Skripal’s arrest in 2004 and, top right, in uniform

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